i l @br Canadian Coven Prince Edward Island Like lie Ile- Publisned every weekday morning It 165 Prince m Charlottetown. P.E.[.. by the. Thomson Company Ltd. (an A. Burnett. Publisher end Generel Ila-us ‘ hens Weller. Editor Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association ‘ Member of The Canadian-Prose Member Aduh Bureau a: Circulation. Branch offices at Summereide. Montague and Alba-h Represented Nationauy by: Thomson Newspape- Advertisine Service a King Street West, Toronto, 640 Cathcart at. Montreal 1030 West Georgia St. Vancouva' By Carrier Charlottetown, Summerside 30c per week, By Mail elsewhere in P.E.I. $9.00 per annum. Otlur Provinces and United States 812.00 per annum. PAGE 4 FRIDAY, JULY .11. 1958. Where~ Are The Boats? Surely it should not be difficult to obtain a fair measure of work on government boats for the skilled mechanics at Charlottetown Marine Industries, Ltd. In former yearsthe Board of Trade \took the initiative in this matter and kept our federal representatives continually on ‘the ‘ alert. It is of little use looking for new . industries if we cannot maintain the ones we have. In late years Marine Industries which formerly employed 250 workmen, has had to scale down its staff to a mere maintenance force and now a 50 percent reduction in this small number is threatened. The men affected are master mechanics find .if they have to go elsewhere for- work for themselVes' and families, we shall likely lose them for good. Pictou is facing an even more serious . condition where a threatened shut- down at Ferguson Industries Ltd. will leave some 400 employees jobless. It is thereforeva matter of Maritime concern, and should be' treated as such. If they cannot get action other- wise, we expect our members to bring this matter up in Parliament and state our needs in no uncertain terms. Western Drought . Unless: conditions improve greatly in the next two or three weeks, much of the'stored grain in the PrairieePro- ,vinces will have to be used. as live stock feed. At the present time the area is suffering from the worst drought since the 1930’s. The situas tion is bad in all three Provinces. Manitoba and Southeast Saskatch- ‘ ewan, however, are the hardest hit. Officials in both areas expect no more than half 'a normal crop. _ ‘ The Canadian Wheat Board, heed- ing appeals frommunicipal authorit- ies,.has announced that it will hold ' supplies 'of _wheat, barley and oats now in country elevators for use as feed. There are about 57 million bush-I .els in the elévatdrsfat present. The! Manitoba Farmers Union has asked the Provincial Government to call a conference of all interested groups to lay plans to cope with the paStune shortage and explore means to obtain winter feed .supplies. This, according to a Canadian Pressreport, would in. elude the purchase of all feed anew available, plans to save allroughage obtainable and an application. to the United States Government to obtain grass grown under that country’s). soil bank policy that is not being used. The Federal Government, too, is reported ready to aid in any way , possible—'41s, indeed, it should,‘ for drought in any part of the country has an adverse effect on the national economy. - , Farmers in this part of Canada. have their «problems—but, fortun- ately, drought is not one of them. Although we have had an occasional. dry summer, not in the memory of most of us has there been a really deVastating drought. It is something ;-—among many other , things-r—for which we should be profoundly thankful. ~ Lebanon's Troubled History The crisis in Lebanon puts the spotlight of world concern on a tiny country that is part Christian, part Moslem,‘ that combines East and West, ancient and modern: Nestled against the eastern shore of the Med- iterranean, it is only 125 miles long and from 20 to 45 miles wide. 0n land it is almost completely surround- ed by Syria, a partner‘with Egypt in the anti—Western United Arab Re- public. On its southern extremity it‘ shares a short frontier with Israel; It is the 185-mile border with Syria that Lebanon‘s pro-Western chief of state has asked the United Nations to help defend. In normal times Lebanon is 3‘ highly prosperous nation, with a shrewd business sense and a blend of scenery and history that rivals that of many a larger nation‘. But is has few natural resources. A third of its 1,500,000 people live in Beirut, the bustling capital that serves as a commercial centre for the entire Near East. Signs advertise in English, French, Arabic, and Armenian. Ties with the West are strong. The Ameri- can University of Beirut, founded in 1866, has 3,000 students representing 44 countries and 30 religious groups. : 'An excellent road network criss- crosses much of the country’s gnarled geography,” writes Thomas J. Aber- crombie, a National Geographic wri- tar-photographer, after a recent visit to Lebanon. “In a single day one can drive from Beirut past the cabanas and bananas of the Mediterranean up to high mountain snow fields, down the inland slope into the broad green plain called Al Biqa’, and before nightfall see nomadic Bedouin tribes ' Y on the semidesert of the Syrian fron- tier.” The fertile Al Biqa’ Valley knew Stone Age cultureantedating Phoe- nician civilization. The great Phoe- nician ports—Tyre, Sidon, and Byblos -—still exist under modern names. Sidon (Sayda) exports oil pumped r from Saudi Arabia through a vital, 1,068-mile pipeline. North of Beirut a narrow valley cuts. through hills ' that parallel the shore, making a na- tural corridor for Lebanon’s ‘succes: sion of conquerors. Rameses II march; ed by 13 centuries before the birth of Christ. Through the‘ pass also came Babylonians, Assyrians, Greeks, Romans, Ottoman Turks, British and French soldiers. Lebanon passed from Turkish to ' French mandatory rule after World ,War‘ly was proclaimed a republic by rthe‘ Free French in the second World ‘ War, andrachieved full indep ndence on January 1, 1944._ Unwritten law ‘1 provides for a Maronite Christian president, Sunni Moslem premier, and a legislature apportioned among var- ious religious sects. Canada Top supplier “Foreign'Trade” reports that Can: ada sold 640 thousand bushels of apples to" ’Britain in .the [season November "1957 to March 1958. This, compares with 392 thousand bushels shipped from the United Statesz'l‘If the standard of this year’s ship; " ments is maintained, Canada can don-fl tinue to dominate the gnarket. Keeping the standard high, says ' the publication, is made easier by the adoption of cell packl’ng. The greater proportion of Canadian apples are now being shipped this wayand it has drawn very favourable comment from the trade. Some, if not all, of the difficulties involved. in the rough handling of shipments" Lib-bye been eliminated. Packing has been sizvital concern to expérters because ' bnly the best grades and packs are accept-- able in the United Kingdom; Canadian apples were admitted into the British market under a single dollar allotment for North America ($114 million), so that importers could spend their. licenses in Canada, or the United States, A small dollar allocation for the'U.K. was set up for canned apples (cooking varieties) be- cause ofKthe acute shortage in Britain this year. This enabled Canadian canned goods to reappear in the Brit- ‘ ish catering trade for the'first time since before the war. EDITORIAL NOTES Fractious children can be as dan- gerous in a car as faulty brakes, the Ontario Safety League notes. .The League suggests :1 “numbers game" to keep them busy. Let the children choose a number under 100 and watch for it at the end of licence numbers ’ on cars going the same way. Pay them a nickel every tii‘ne they spot the digits. That mightresult in the ‘driver going temporarily broke, but worse thingscould happen to him in the situation outlined , - e 4 i e . It is reported from Ottawa that import restrictions onv’fowl, in effect since July 17, 1957, have been re- moved. The restrictions were imposed to protect the poultry industry against falling prices resulting from the effect of having imports. Agricul- ture Minister Harkness is quoted as saying that lower Canadian market- ings “and a closer price relationship between Canadian and American markets” now have removed the necessity for restrictions. Whether poultry raisers will share his view- point is another matter. ' v 4 i - The official reason‘given for Presi- dential Assistant Sherman Adam‘s exclusion from President Eisen- hower’s party, on the state visit to Ottawa is that at the‘ last moment the President decided not to go fishing and therefore did not ask Mr. Adams .to show him the good spots. It is doubtful that Mr. Adams will swallow that story. Certainly, most Canadians won’t. It would have. been much bet- ter if White House officials had stated frankly that Mr. Adams’ im- prudence in accepting gifts from an industrialist, who was in difficulties with a Federal agency, made it un- wise for him to travel abroad at this time—or, failing that, had said noth— ing about Mr. Adams. e ‘CEisbnh .fl; .3; ,.,. . fl/fi; Padiilhmentmayélgo down hard ,With, sonic Canadians. He made cleanthe United States has no present intention of backing away from economic and trade policies that have irritated and caused concern in Canadian quarters. His visit to Ottawa was looked on by some also possible Almer— lcan mve toward of- vital Canada-U.S. cleavages on oil, wheat and. general bilateral ‘ trade. Indeed, he said he is convinced acceptable solutions can and will be found, provided more is give * and take ,on-fboth But he did‘not mos! CO or concessions. Instead, he tried to point up the good side of, Amer- ican restrictions, to explain and defend them and indeed to show how they might in some cases be 3 to the 0&1de 60011:- omy.‘ , , TOUCHES TENDER SPOT Heaven raised the question of whether Canada is as interested as the U.S. in expansion of world trade or whether emu. wanted * to do some “drtificial” redirect- ing. This apparently was an ob- liqu'e reference to Prime Minis- : ' POOR ,3? i By HaroldMoi-rison' D Canadian Press Staff Writer President Eisenhower’s speech ower’stOtto‘wo Speech ter Diefbmbaker's expressed wish ‘that Canada might redirect 15 per cent of heriunports from the U.S. to Britain. “I assume that Canada is as interested as we are in the ex’ passion of world trade rather than in its artificial redirection,” Mr. Eisenhower said. This may have touched a tender spo in Progressive Conservative q - tors. Reporters asked Mr. Dicrfen- baker for comment. But he said he never abstracted any pantie-:2 ular line from a speech. He liked the “spirit of cry-operation” that seemed to cover the speech gen- erally. That was as far as he would go. ' , Naturally, it would be impolite for the prime minister, playing host to the head of a neighboring, stake, to say anything less than; complimentary. .But Mr. Diet- enbaker has previously made known his views on American trade policy. . He has criticized the American Sm Wheat giveaway program, American restrictions on imports of Canadian oil, the fact Canada has a huge deficit in American trade and that American high- THKE A’CADIANS OF P.E.l. Restoration Period By J. Henri Blanchard. LL.D. 1 (Continued from yesterday) Forty years after the Deporta- tion, in the year 1798, a com. plete census of PrincgEdward' Island was taken by Robert Fox, surveyor, by" orders from Gov- ernor Fanning. According to this census there were then 112 Aca- dian families with a total of GI persons. Eastern Arctic Mysteries. In the year 1803, Bishop De- naut of Quebec visited Prince Edward Island. He gave a very complete account of the situation of the Acadians of the Island. He gives thepopulation of VAcadian descent as 742 souls. Father Ma— thurin Bourg who visited the Is- land" in 1735 stated that he found only 50 Acadian families. By W.E. Taylor, National Museum of Canada Traces of the Capt Dorset cul- ture were discovered during arc- haeological investigations of nort— hern Ung‘ava Peninsula. ' My wife and I left Quebec City inJuly on the CPS Montcalm and disembarked at the settlement of Payne Bay on the west coast of Ungava Bay. Our first Cape Dorset discovery was on a small island in the estuary of the Payne river.Here we found three small stone houses and -a much larger structure. ' . The most exciting find was a grave containing what I believe to be the first complete human skeleton of this culture ever rec overed for scientific study. - From the bone structure of the skeleton, I could find no apparent differences between it and the skeleton of a present—day but the presence of an unmistak- able Cape Dorset lance-point in the grave and the proximity of other Cape Dorset remains left me no other conclusion than‘to - identify it tentatively us Cape Dorset. The stone houses were rectan— gular semi-subterranean dwell- ings that had been built of stone. These are commonremnins of Cape Dorset occupation but the large structure was a puzzle that I have not yet solved. Certainly nothing like it has ever been found before in the Eastern Arc- tic. . It was 85 feet long and 31 feet wide and seemed to have been constructed partly of huge rocks. What use the Dorset people would make of such a building I do not know but its size raises the interesting ’ speculation that wood may have been used. in its construction. Perhaps some clay we will know that the forest of Ungava once extended far beyond the present tree-line. " The age of these remains ihat least 1,000 years. From the little culture its time span was about 2,000 years covering a period from about 500 BC to 1400 AD. I believe the remains found in the Payne river estuary are late- Dorset- On the banks of the Payne river near Payne Lake we found four Dorset campsites, three of them villages. One had 22 houses, an- other 15, and a third, three. Al- though the houses were generally of conventional Cape Dorset de- sign they were dug deeper into the‘eart‘h and in one house we found a large fragment of a sled- shoe at a depth of four feet. This w a s an extraordinary discovery. So far no one has suggested that the early people of Ungava spent the Winters so far inland. Payne Lake is about 150 miles from the coast yet here were a sled-shoe and deeply ex- cavated houses indicating that there had been Winter habitation. We found several Spring or Sum— mer camps that are prehaps 100 .years old in the area but there is no anthropological record of any tribe living off the land in Ungava during the ’Wintertime We saw practically no animal life ‘in the area during our stay and contemporary Eskimos avoid the interior because it is .50 bar- ren of game tresources. How- ever, the large quantity of car- ibou bones we found around the sites «suggests that this land once provided good hunting and may have provided enough game to sustain early Eskimo tribes even in Winter. VACATION POST CARD tariff policy restricted imports. LITTLE COMFORT Mr. Eisenhower’s explanation of‘how the American wheat give- away In a y _ eventually widen :world markets for wheat. may find little appreciation 'ampug »prairie grain growers with huge surpluses on their farm and little money in their pockets. * An assurance by the" president that the U.S. has tried to “mun- iniize” the impact of its all im- port curbs on the Canadian econ- omy may be of little comfort to suddenly found their American markets cut off. And the president's discourse on how deficits in trade with one country are sometimes offset by surpluses in trade with others may find little appreciation among Canadian exporters ..who long have maintained that Amara loan tariffs «are too restrictive, making it tough for Canadians to, get into that big market. 1 The Canadian govermnemtt it been concerned over the" American control of vital Cana- dian industry, such as mining and petroleum. But the president said, in effect, that the Amer-loanecon- omy, like that of the Canadian, is based on private enterprise. Trade was devellppedtlu’ough the» interplay of private concerns. Govermnent could, do little about this. All these censuses and reports are proof sufficient that the De- portation «was almost complete. From these few families are de- scended almost all the 15,799 Ac- adians listed in‘ the census of 1951. Nearly 14,000 of these are listed under only 22 family names (surname). , E ‘ In 1798, the Acadiens of the Island were settled in onlytiflee localities : Rollo Bay. MALPEC SETTLEMENT The settlement of. Malpec be— fore the Deportation was foun- and Charles Arsenault..who are the ancestors, of all the Arsena- ults of Prince Edward Isrand. ' This settlement was situated on the :West shore of Richmond Bay on lots 13 and-14. The church. dedicated to the Holy Family was situated at Low Point, which the French called “La Pointe aux standing. After peace was -restored by few of the former inhabitants of Malpec returned but they did not settle at the old location. They took up land on the shores of Richmond Bay once more; but now it was on Lots 19, 17 and 16. 0nd” Malpec. They built a church there near what they called “La Riviere Platte”. They were loca- ted there when the census of 1798 was taken. Several of these families mov- ed to Tig‘nish in 1799, others went ers to Egmont Bay and Mount Carmel in 1812, and finally, the Toronto, Ont. (Specia|)—-F or Eskimos were employed for'the field work and often hired as guides. They respected my in— terest in their people, which they considered more genuine than the interest they received ‘ passing from other white men who came to Unglava principally toexploil its mineral resources. 1 was very surprised and embarrassed when I realized they were regarding me as a learned authority on the _early Eskimo cultures and ad- vertising me to their friends as ‘The Man Who Knows‘. Their usual name for me was Angay ooloarapik (the little boss, as dis tinct from the Hudson Bay Com pany manager who was the bi: boss). My wife was called Nin geyoovoot (the only woman). licence as a nation, but tlieir‘ very survival! the first time science has found a new healing substance with the ability to shrink hemorrhoids and to relieve pain and itching l Thousands have been relieved ‘ with this inexpensive'substance right. in the privacy of their own home without any discomfort or inconvenience. In one hemorrhoid case after another, “very striking improve-_ ment" was reported and verified by doctors’ observations Pain was promptly relieved. And while gently relieving pain, actual reduction or retraction (shrinking) took place. And most amazmg of all-this improvement was maintained in cases where doctors‘ observations were continued Over a period of many months! In fact, results were so thorough Western oil producers who have.) Malpec, Rustico end . tied in 1728, by Pierre Arsenault, Vieux”. At the time of the Hol-. ' land survey this church was still the Treaty of Paris in 1763, a. In other words, this was a "‘sec- : to cascumpeque in 1801. still rlth- » When Buying Hearing Aid By Herman N. Bundesen, M. D. A SILENT world is a lonely one. If you are hard of hearing, don’t wait any longer. See your physician or an ear specialist to» morrow to determine whether a hearing aid can bring back those sounds—screeching horn-s, clatter— ing trains, the whisper of a loved one—~t‘hat are such an important part of our daily lives. If the doctor says your. hear- ing loss can be aided by a heat- ing device—and most hearing dif- ficulties can —- get one as quickly as possible. - YOU MUST CHOOSE 4 ~ But, and this is a big but, get one which best benefits your par- 7 ticular condition. While you should consult with your doctor about which aid is most likely to help you are the final judge. I’ve given you a few tips in the past to‘help you select a he 'ng aid. Now I’d like to pass 0 a few more from Better Hearing Magazine. You should judge a hearing aid on the following points: 1. Performance. This is most important. Make sure the aid delivers enough power for your particular hearing loss. Remem- ber, the function of an aid is to bring sound back into your life as richly and as quickly as pos— sible. . . _ CHECK COST 2 Cost per hour of operation. Economy of operation is impor- tant, of course, since you will be paying for its use continually. A good conventional aid can be op“ enatcd for one-tenth of a cent an hour. Some very tiny aids cost six times as ‘mi'iclh "to operate. Let me inlec-t one more tip on .‘econmn-y. Be sure to remove the it off each night when you go to bed. Not (Fly "will this prevent exhaustion of the batteries, but been used longer than recom- ing your hearing aid. GET RIGHT SIZE . *3. Size. Don’t sacrifice good hearing for allsize. A minia-\ ture aldunay or may not be best last families of the “second” Malpec parish moved to Mis- couche in 1817. With the execu- .tion of' the parish of Bloomfield where many'of the people are Rustico nearly all the 10,000 Ac- “adians of Prince County are de- scended from the settlers of Mn}- ec. ’p.The other common surnames of Acadians of Malpec were Gallant, Gaudg't, Richard. Aucoin. Pairier. ‘DesRoches, Doucette, ,Bernard. ‘Chiasson, Cormier. ATS-RUSTICO. «There was no Acadian settle- ment at Rustico,,prior to the De- portation. From the Census of 1788, we learn that five families then settled- tbere. These ‘were. the, families of Louis Jean, J0seph~ and Bazile Gallah-t and Jean Pitre (Peters). Shortly at; ter l they were joined' by th e Buo‘tes, Blanchand's. Doucettes, Doiron's, Martins and Gaudets. About 1793, - the Blaq- uieres, the LeClairs, the“ Gauth- iers and the'.-Pineaus settled in North Rustico. r . From the old parish of Bus-- tico have been perish of North Rustico, and e large number of the parishioners of Hope River parish. Large con: tingents of Rustico settlers have since 1860 formed the parishes of “St. Alexis-in-Quebec, and the "parish-of St. Charles in Prince EdWsrd Island, while large num- bers have migrated to the par- iches’ or Bloomfield, P.E.I., Ac- adieville and Rogersville in New Brunswick. The early Acadians who even-_ tually. settled in Rollo Bay Were. first locath on both banks‘of Fortune River. Strained rela- tions with their proprietor led to their moving" farther north, and into the present town of Souris These families bear the surnames of LeBlancs (White), Bourque, (B u r k e), Dalgles (Beagles). Cheissons, Lougueepee, Pi- tr‘es (Peters) 'and Cheverie. (To be continued) ,- most , inexpénslve s‘olesmon. you can employ - - - q GUARDIAN- " PATRIOT WANT‘ AD Phone 8565' batteries from your aid or tum ' it will prevent those that have - mended from leaking and _dama~g—. descendants of families f r o m A Chaissons. ’ detached the ~ ‘. Science Now Shrinks Piles‘ " Without Paine 0r . Discomfort Finds Healing Substance That Relieves Pain And Itching As It Shrinks Hemorrhoids that sufferers were able to make such statements as “Piles have ceased to be a problem!" And among these sufferers were a very wide variety of hemorrhoid con- ditions, some of eyen l0 to 20 years' standing . - All this, without the use of nah cotics, anesthetics or astringents’ of any kind. The secret is a new heal- ing subs'lance (Bio-Dyne) -~ the discovery of a famousscienlific in- stitute. Already, Bio-Dyne is in wide use for healing injured tissue on all parts of the body , This new healing substance is offered in suppository or ointh form called Preparalion H Ask for individually sealed convenient Preparation H Suppositories or Preparation H ointment with special applicator. Preparation H is sold at all drug stores. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. NOTES BY THE WA “\_ l We understand the resentment shown by nurses because an 0t- tawa stenographer, who is not a nurse was chosen as the model a new fiveccent postage stamp liblhouring the profession. The nur- ses feel something like newspap- er folk do when they are depic- ted in the movies and on TV, not as the scholarly types they really are, but as.irrespon51ble, hot-on-back-of-head illiterates who would sell their grandmother up or down the river for a story. This is a false pictue. of course; not all newspaper folk have grandmothers—Hamilton Specta- tor r on. Find out about the com- glingtive power output and oper— ating cost before you purchase . id. . all: fnitial Cost. Excellent aids are available at moderate prices. Generally, a miniature aid cost more V than corresponding conventional .type'sr.h re is a wide 5. A arance. e range pdle models available. Some have elegant designs, some are inconspicuous. Choose one that suits your individual taste and harmonizes with the way you dress. r QUESTION AND ANSWER S. M.: I have had tuberculo- sis, which is now 'cured. Will my children inherit the tendency to get this disease? . Answer: No: children do not in- herit tuberculosis or a tendency to develop it if they are protect- {ed against undue contact with the disease. OUR YESTERDAYS (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (July 11, 1933) . Courses in nine subjects Will be offered at Prince of Wales College in the Fourth Your Course, which .will: begin till 3' fall, it was learned yesterday. In a number of subjects two cour- ses will be offered, but only five ‘_-- subjects may be taken by any one student. However, there will probably be' no Fourth Year Course in Mathematics, as mam- land univenstitiesldo not require such a course, and only the ex- ceptionml student would require it.’ One of the largest steamers to enter Charlottetown, the “Fort St. George”, of the F-urness-Witby, Red Cross Line, docked yester- day morning at Carvell’s wharf and sailed at noon today for Montreal. It is expected the ship will make resuler calls at this port as the 8.6. has gone to theth Indies. ‘ TEN YEARS AGO V ‘ (July 11. 1948) . The “J.J. Cowle”, a fishing boat owned by the Fisheries Re- search of Canada, is expected to arrive in Alberton today to car- ry on fishery experiments. The "Cowie” is modelled and equip- ped in the style of the Danish seinens which are said to make successful catches of codfish with- out the usexof trolls as used here in this province. The International For Breed- ers conference, the first of its kind ever held, will commence its deliberations at the Charlotte town Hotel this morning. The purpose of the conference is to provide a medium through which all interested nations, through their delegates, can meet in open asSemlbly to discuss the fur breed- ing, industry. ‘ MAXIMS I have failed to take advantage ’of many opportunities, but the world has not failed in offering them. . . . e BEASLEY AVENUE We don’t like to put on the dog—but fiOODfi‘EAR has done it again. New 3-T Nylon Deluxe Super-Cushions are now yours for just $19.95*. ' Not just nylon either but super strong, super tough 3-T Nylon ‘_ONLY GOODYEAR HAS IT! See us for New, Low price NYLON DELUXE SUPER-CUSHION. , PHONE: 8642 -_ _ RETREADINGH VULCANIZING - Gooomgpmtmis A man from Fortune 3.3 at the other day about the ber of good woodsmen “1, community who had to .u 1 home because they could a job in a logging g worst of it was, hem;- they all had a sizeablg; if ment in a chain saw._3;‘§; very investment was .,., part of the reason “my . men could not get work Q Spring—Newfoundland Howl United Kingdom livestock mers visiting Canada at. ‘ ted to have said, after a tow, ‘ Ontario and Quebec: “Where‘ “ your sheep?" Almost every adian farmer is readyzto, wer this at (length without coming near the truth. The is that Canadians, by and , don’t like sheep. Horses, e even hogs, yes, but sheep ' seldom favorites.-—Ottawa ,1 ml . After Sunday morning ,. service, a woman stayed to with... friend leaving her .. _ I on the seat. When she rel . for her purse, it was gone, ‘ she quickly found it in the m \, session of the clergy...” him’ self. “I thought I had bo‘tey Md it”, he .said. “You must rem“; , her that there are some in My congregation so simple theft» 3" might consider it an answer b prayer."—Galt Reporter ., L .., ,s i; 4... v i l VALLEY OF THE SHEan If The sun flooded the valley‘“ noon. ’ A shaft from the heaven's, _ Ane the meadow floor was 'gu. , as emeralds, As though there had been m The sheep were whiter than 4; I had ever observed, I Cleaner, like bits of clouds" ped from a summer slay. 9 But the shepherds were up“, est of all. They stood as tall as mum and as still. " Shepherds in pimple robes, so far away I could not tell If they were kind or cruel; I could not study their m, 0r look into their eyes. But at night I mist came, W). ' ' ' e , A curtain dropped on the , And I never saw the. ii - 01581111. 1 3 Not like 7’ ' ' : Only the mountains, on the next - day. ' Diets-Mind severe. ' Only the sheep dusty hum flu roads. —.LOUISE D. GUNN. in the New York Herald-mine l The Age Old§tory " Return. ye backslidilirthfld- ten, and I will hei yourbuk- endings. Behold, we come we Thee; for Thou are the Low our GOD. ;y RENT-A-CAB ' ' SERVICE 1% An exclusive rental service for Prince Edward Island. GREENE’S GARAny ST. PETER’S ROAD PHONE 9935 ‘6.70 x 15 with trade-in PROVINCIA .TIRE SALES . P .RKDALE